“Big Iron”

Big Iron Exhibit, New Computer Museum v. 1.5

Mainframe computers (colloquially referred to as “big iron”) tend to be used by large organizations for critical applications such as statistical data analysis and transaction processing. Several manufacturers produced mainframe computers from the late 1950s through the 1970s, and they were generally known as “IBM and the Seven Dwarfs. According the the History of Computing Project, mainframe computers have from 1 to 16 CPU’s (although modern machines have more), memory ranges from 128 Mb to over 8 Gigabyte on line RAM, processing power ranges from 80 over 550 Mips, and they often have different cabinets for Storage, I/O and RAM. — The History of Computing Project

So, where’s your “big iron” baby?

The New Computer Museum facilitates the preservation and exhibition of a wide range of computing systems in their original state for the public to experience and enjoy first-hand… within certain limits. Mainframe computers don’t have the nick name “big iron” for no reason. Anything that requires figuring out how to get massive amounts of electrical power just to get started is beyond those limits. The New Computer Museum will not be going into the business of obtaining and maintaining mainframe systems. The goals in this arena are purely educational and collaborative. Mainframes were a crucial stepping stone to today’s computing environment, and luckily, numerous New Computer Museum advisers, donors and supporters will provide relevant artifacts and interpretation of them. The core plane below is just one example of this, so somewhat ironically, we literally have a very small exhibit about “big iron.”

Core Plane

Core Plane: A core plane is a network of magnetic cores. Each core acts as a single storage location. Information can be read by altering the magnetization of the cores. (Note: A core plane has been loaned to the New Computer Museum by an anonymous donor labeled with this text interpretation, and this extremely similar image of a core plane is from the “Magnetic core memory” page on Wikipedia.)